Hotel workers sing of la Wendy (Greuel) and $15 an hour wages

The union representing hotel workers in Los Angeles has been out in force campaigning for Wendy Greuel for mayor. In large part that's because union leaders said Greuel told them she supports their proposal to impose a $15-an-hour minimum wage at big hotels in the city.

To fire up their workers, and voters, about the wage plan, United Here, Local 11, composed a mariachi-style song that it played over the weekend from a pickup equipped with loudspeakers.

Greuel has been less than crystal clear about her position on the $15 wage. She equivocated when asked about it on Saturday. After The Times reported this to union leaders, Greuel's spokeswoman emailed that "Wendy supports living wage for hotel workers at $15."

The hotel workers union is trying to expand higher wage benefits from 13 hotels near Los Angeles International Airport to a total of more than 80 hotels (with more than 100 rooms each) around the city.

The Chamber of Commerce and other business leaders have said they do not support the proposal.

The union argues that the hotel business is thriving and that workers have trouble paying basic living expenses on salaries that still average only about $10.50 an hour. They hope to get the City Council to approve the "Raise L.A." wage of $15 and then have the law signed by the new mayor.

Greuel's rival, City Councilman Eric Garcetti, has said he supports living wage enhancements, like the one for airport-area hotels, where workers now make a minimum of roughly $12 an hour. But Garcetti said he is not ready to commit to a specific minimum pay for hotel workers in the rest of the city.